0 someone who is eating a meal, especially in a restaurant
1 someone who eats a meal, esp. in a restaurant:
He comes in very early – he’s an early diner.
During the late 1940s and 1950s, diners, bowling alleys and trailer parks all sought to detach from their hardscrabble and unsavoury origins.
Incredible as it may seem, other diners found that the sight of people with disabilities eating in the same place put them off their food.
The number of staff required varies with the number of diners.
I will certainly net permit a discussion of diners as workers.
Is there to be any indication of whether they must have four tables or 40 tables for diners?
One of my fellow diners raised the problem of the deliberate leaving-on of the two-way radios fitted to delivery motor cycles.
There is yet another sector where accidents can occur —the private sector, at theme parks, motorway service centres or, as is increasingly the case, roadside diners or even pubs.
Have not the last few months shown that this order limiting the number of diners is unfair, unworkable, and quite useless, and is it not time that it was cancelled?
中文繁体
(尤指餐館裡的)進餐者,食客, (美國的)路邊小餐館…
More中文简体
(尤指餐馆里的)进餐者,食客, (美国的)路边小餐馆…
MoreEspañol
comensal, cafetería, cafetería [feminine]…
MorePortuguês
cliente (de restaurante), lanchonete…
MoreTürk dili
lokanta müşterisi, esnaf lokantası, küçük ucuz lokanta…
MoreFrançais
petit restaurant [masculine], dîneur/-euse [masculine-feminine], dîneur/-euse…
MoreČeština
host, obědvající, večeřící…
MoreDansk
gæst, middagsgæst, spisevogn…
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